A Self Silence

New to poetry? Unsure about the quality of your work? Then why not post here to receive some gentle feedback.
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MikeSamford
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Joined: Sat Apr 26, 2008 8:51 pm

Sun Apr 27, 2008 10:51 pm

Oh! Have you heard a stone's grief?
An inward pity shrieked in vain.
It resonates beyond belief
like a rose's scream under winter’s strain
or crumbling of spirit by parting’s pain.

Echoes of longing for inner peace
the hum of want and wonder why.
A ringing in ear that will never cease
from a shrill of passion's passing sigh;
silent as stones when they cry.
Last edited by MikeSamford on Tue Apr 29, 2008 11:55 pm, edited 3 times in total.
Richard WH
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Mon Apr 28, 2008 6:45 am

I like this.
Wasn't sure about the O! at the start and then having read it a couple of times think the line needs it. Would prefer Oh myself.
love the line "like a rose's scream under winter's strain" with it being linked to vain. Always thought roses were slightly overrated flowers myself.
For the last line I think it would read better if it were
loud as stones when they start to cry
The meaning of communication is the response it gets
arunansu
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Mon Apr 28, 2008 7:20 am

Personally I did not like the rhyming of 'relief' with 'grief', 'pain' with 'strain' etc. The rest of the work is really very nice. I admire your thoughts too. I love the lines:
"Echoes of longing for inner peace
the hum of want and wonder why." And oh! It sounds better as Oh! and not O!
Smiles.
Elphin
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Mon Apr 28, 2008 9:05 am

Welcome on board Mike.

I think you have made good use of rhyme and sustained the image of the stones cry well. a rose's scream under winter’s strain is an interesting image, personally I visualise roses sighing rather than screaming - they don't fight the inevitability of their withering so do they scream?

I think you need to make the second stanza clearer. Its partly punctuation, I think.

Ringing in ears that never cease - its not the ears that never cease so should it be ceases? Do you need an article before shrill? Is the ringing caused by the shrill. I think you may have manipulated the sense of this stanza to get the rhymes.

The last line is missing a beat.

I hope you post some more

elphin
Merlin
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Mon Apr 28, 2008 1:53 pm

Yeah - like this, :D I think the rhyme is great - it flows nicely - good poem...

Agree with E, the last line needs another beat...
MikeSamford
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Tue Apr 29, 2008 12:30 am

Thank you all –very good suggestions; I will do some revision. You all have been a great help and THANK YOU!!
kozmikdave
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Tue Apr 29, 2008 12:40 pm

Gidday

The rhyme scheme worked for me too.

The thing that struck me, and not picked up by others so far, is in the first stanza:

Oh! Have you heard a stone's grief?
An inward pity shrieked in vain.
It resonate beyond belief,
like a rose's scream under winter’s strain
or crumbling of spirit by parting’s pain.


On first read, and in keeping with the current punctuation, it should be "resonates", but on further readings, I want to interpret it as (Have you heard) it resonate....

This would mean changing the punctuation faily drastically, to tun it into a list.

Nice...
Cheers
Dave

"And I'm lost, and I'm lost
I'm lost at the bottom of the world
I'm handcuffed to the bishop and the barbershop liar
I'm lost at the bottom of the world
"
[Tom]
MikeSamford
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Tue Apr 29, 2008 11:53 pm

Thanks Dave, I will attend to the repairs.
Dublin
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Wed Apr 30, 2008 5:40 pm

I liked this piece, Mike. It has a neat structure and good rhymes too. They actually all sound well and not forced; I find, they work well together.
Above that, I especially like the parting’s pain. and the passion's passing sigh, very beautiful use of language. I can't say much about the content and message but I do think that it's a good poem.
MikeSamford
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Wed Apr 30, 2008 11:26 pm

Thank you very much, Dublin.
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